Intelligent peer-to-peer system and method for collaborative suggestions and propagation of media

ABSTRACT

In a network-based system for recommending media content items based on user preferences, clients contact a server on a periodic basis, independent of the user. In addition to client-server interaction, clients also interact with one another in peer-to-peer fashion. Peers query one another and evaluate their similarity to each other in an interactive comparison of user preferences. When two clients are sufficiently similar, the interaction culminates in the originating client downloading content listings from the targeted peer to generate suggestions for their user. If the two clients are dissimilar, the query may be terminated, or the targeted peer may route the query to a second targeted peer. In addition to the lists of preferences, the originating client may download actual content items from the targeted peers.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS; BENEFIT CLAIM

This application claims the benefit as a Continuation of application Ser. No. 10/168,782, filed Jun. 21, 2002 the entire contents of which is hereby incorporated by reference as if fully set forth herein, under 35 U.S.C. §120. The applicant(s) hereby rescind any disclaimer of claim scope in the parent application(s) or the prosecution history thereof and advise the USPTO that the claims in this application may be broader than any claim in the parent application(s).]

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

1. Field of the Invention

The present invention relates to automated systems and methods for recommending items to users. More particularly, the invention relates to an automated peer-to-peer system and method for collaborative suggestions and propagation of media.

2. Description of Related Art

The prior art provides various systems for filtering, suggesting and rating of media content items. Common methods of suggesting and rating items occasionally employ collaborative filtering techniques, in which a user's preference profile is compared with profiles of similar users or groups of users. The co-pending application, K. Ali, W. Van Stam, “Intelligent system and methods of recommending media content items based on user preferences,” U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/______ (Dec. 21, 2000) discusses several of these collaborative filtering implementations. In addition, J. Atcheson, J. Miller, “Method and apparatus for recommending selections based on preferences in a multi-user system,” U.S. Pat. No. 5,583,763 (Dec. 10, 1996) describe a system for determining selections that a user is likely to be interested in. A determination is made, based on a user's prior indicated preferences, designated in a preferences list. The list is compared with other users' lists. When a large number of matches is found between two lists, the unmatched entries of the other user's list are extracted. Typically, these implementations require a client-server network environment and a stateful connection between the client and the server. Correlations are calculated on the server, based on data periodically supplied by the client, necessitating monitoring of the client state, thereby raising confidentiality concerns. It would be desirable to provide a collaborative suggestion system in which a stateful connection between client and server is unnecessary, thus reducing concerns about user privacy.

The above-identified co-pending application, K. Ali, et al., supra, describes a distributed collaborative filtering engine that guarantees user privacy by eliminating the necessity of correlating the user to other user's or groups of users. Similarity is calculated on the client side, eliminating the necessity of a stateful connection between the server and the client. The described system, however, employs a client-server architecture in which information is exchanged only between client and server. It would be an advantage to provide a system for collaborative suggestion in a peer-to-peer environment, which makes opportunistic use of an existing network connection, wherein peers evaluate their similarity to one another.

Peer-to-peer file sharing systems are becoming increasingly common. For example, the “Gnutella Support Pages,” http://gnutella.wego.com (no date) describe a peer-to-peer network composed of a multiplicity of Gnutella clients, in which the client software includes an integrated search engine and file server. The Gnutella network changes constantly, according to the number of Gnutella clients that are on the network at any given time. No server exists, and the network infrastructure is provided by a publicly accessible network, such as the Internet. In order to access the Gnutella network, a user must have the network address of at least one other Gnutella client that is currently connected. A user in search of a particular information object, a digital music file, or a recipe, for example, may send a query over the network. The query is passed from client to client until the object is located or the query is terminated. While the Gnutella client allows the creation of a dynamic peer-to-peer network, and sharing of files between clients, the query process is user-initiated: queries are formulated and launched by the user with no automation of the query process. Additionally, the Gnutella network is primarily directed to file sharing, in which media content items are shared or propagated between users. There is no capability of comparing user profiles between clients in order to generate collaborative suggestions. Furthermore, the Gnutella network is concerned exclusively with the peer-to-peer network paradigm.

It would be a technological advance to provide a system for collaborative suggestions and media propagation that did not require a stateful connection between a client and server, thus safeguarding privacy of individual users. It would be a great advantage to implement such a system as a peer-to-peer based system that was capable of operating in parallel with client-server based suggestion systems, opportunistically employing the same network connection, wherein suggestions generated by both systems are presented in the same software interface. Furthermore, it would be desirable to automate the peer-to-peer system, so that clients could initiate and carry out interactions with each other without direction or intervention by a user.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

A network-based intelligent system for predicting ratings for items of media content according to how likely they are to appeal to a user provides a parallel, peer-to-peer system and method for collaborative suggestions and propagation of media. Using a typical client-server architecture, clients contact a server on a periodic basis, independent of the user. In addition to client-server interaction, clients also make opportunistic use of the network connection to interact with one another in peer-to-peer fashion. The server organizes clients into groups and provides each client within a group with the network address of all other clients in the group. An originating client queries a targeted peer by transmitting a list indicative of its user's preferences. The targeted peer evaluates the similarity of the transmitted list with a list of its own. If the two clients are sufficiently similar, the comparison continues in an interactive fashion. After the initial determination by the targeted peer, the exchange of information proceeds in a stepwise manner, with the originating client evaluating similarity at each stage. If the two clients are dissimilar, either the originating client or the targeted peer may terminate the query, depending on the stage of the interaction; or the targeted peer may route the query to a second targeted peer. The interaction culminates in the originating client downloading content listings from the targeted peer to generate suggestions for their user. In addition to the lists of preferences, the originating client may download actual content items from the targeted peers.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 provides a block diagram of a network-based video recording system, according to the invention; and

FIG. 2 provides a block diagram illustrating peer-to-peer interaction among the clients of the system of FIG. 1, according to the invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The co-pending application, K. Ali, et al., supra, provides an intelligent, distributed system for recommending items of content to a user, based on the user's expressed preferences. The described system, shown here in FIG. 1, employs a client-server network architecture in which each of a plurality of clients is periodically in contact with the server. In the described system, all interaction occurs between the client 11 and the server 10, as FIG. 1 shows. However, the current invention extends the suggestion generating capability of the previous system by making opportunistic use of the network connection to provide peer-to-peer interaction among the clients, so that the knowledge embodied on each of the clients is further leveraged by exchanging suggestions and content directly between clients, in peer-to-peer fashion. In the parallel peer-to-peer system, shown in FIG. 2, the server 10 is operative to organize simultaneously connected clients 11 into one or more groups 20, whereupon the server provides each client within a group 20 the network address of all other clients in the same group. Beyond this initial function, all interaction occurs among the clients, independently of the server, in parallel with the client-server interaction. In the system of the parent application, the client is in contact with the server for a short period of time to download current program guide data and to exchange data with the server for the purpose of generating collaborative suggestions. Since the time of connection varies from day-to-day, in a large community of users, the selection of clients connected to the network at any given time is apt to be fairly random, so that, over time, each client is randomly exposed to a large population of other clients, thereby enabling a rich exchange of information.

While the preferred embodiment of the invention employs the Internet as its network infrastructure, other publicly accessible telecommunications networks would also be suitable: for example, a cable television network. The presently preferred embodiment of the invention employs a dial up network connection. However, hardwired connections, for example, coaxial or fiber optic cable would also be suitable, particularly in the case of broadband implementations of the invention. Furthermore, wireless connections would also be consistent with the spirit and scope of the invention. The type of media involved is highly variable. While the present embodiment of the invention is concerned primarily with various types of television programming, the invention also finds application with text files, web sites, books, digital music; in short, almost any type of digital media.

Communication occurs directly between the clients, in a manner that is difficult to trace or monitor. Furthermore, network addresses are dynamically assigned, and are valid only for the duration of the connection. Thus, the temporary and anonymous nature of the peer-to-peer interaction provides an important safeguard to user privacy.

During their interaction, two clients go through an interactive comparison procedure, in which they compare information that is highly indicative of their respective user's interests. At each step of the procedure, correlation, or similarity is calculated. If the correlations converge, the originating client may request user preference lists from the target peer. If such a convergence isn't reached or the correlation is deemed too low, then the query can be terminated or relayed to a second targeted peer. Various embodiments of the method of interaction between peers are described below.

Peer-to-Peer Suggestion System

In the invented system, a pool of client devices is simultaneously connected to a network. The presently preferred embodiment of the invention incorporates clients of a distributed personal video recording system, in which every client is a dedicated video recording unit. Resident on every client are several lists that are highly indicative of a user's preferences. Minimally, the lists include:

-   -   Lists of recorded items that are currently available for         viewing;     -   Lists of various types of items to record (single programs,         series, programs of a particular subject or type, programs         having a particular actor, and so on); and     -   Lists of rated items.

I. Peer-to-Peer Interconnection

As previously indicated, clients connect to a central server periodically. In a larger community of users, there is a constant group of clients connected to the server, dynamic in nature, in which clients constantly come and go.

The server organizes clients by connection time, so that clients that have connected recently are all placed in the same group; additionally, the server controls group size. A larger group size is preferable in order to maximize the opportunity for interaction among clients. The server provides each client in the group network with network addresses to all other clients in the group. Following group formation, each client is free to contact any other client in the group directly.

II. Peer-to-Peer Interaction

The lists mentioned above may be hundreds or even thousands of items in length. Thus, exchanging an entire list or set of lists between clients may be impractical, particularly in the case of a narrowband dial up network connection. Therefore, a variety of methods have been provided to facilitate peer-to-peer interaction in a manner that economizes on time and network resources.

Method 1: Small Lists Having Dense Meaning.

Each client has one or more compact lists of items that are highly representative of the user's preferences. These may be the list of series to record, or the list of items currently available. Each of them armed with such a list, an originating client (A) and targeted client (B) interact as follows:

-   -   Client A sends a query to B, consisting of the list, and the         size of the other lists it has to exchange.     -   Client B receives the query and compares A's list with its own         corresponding list to determine the number of elements it shares         in the list with client A. It now computes the similarity         between A and B, according to an algorithm, resident on both A         and B, in which:         -   Similarity=Number of elements in common between A and             B/number of elements reported by A. Similarity is expressed             as a value in a range of approximately 0 to 1. Client B may             respond in one of several ways:

If the similarity value is less than a first predetermined threshold, it can respond to A that B has nothing that A might be interested in.

If the similarity value exceeds the predetermined threshold, B can respond that A should be interested in B. In addition, B sends more information with the response that indicates relative sizes of B's lists, compared to A's. For example, B might say “Yes, you are 80% interested in me, and I have twice the number of ratings data that you have, and a third your size of recording history”. Client A's response is described further below.

If the similarity value is less than the predetermined threshold, B may pass the query from A to a second targeted peer. Upon redirecting, a reference to B is appended to the query so that successive peers know not to pass the query to B. It also allows A to know which clients have evaluated its query when it receives a response. In any further queries originated by A, it will then skip over those that have already been queried.

If Client A receives a positive response from a targeted peer, comprising similarity values, relative list sizes and a listing of peers that have evaluated the query, further interaction is determined by A. If A determines that the similarity value is less than a second predetermined threshold, A terminates the query. Having terminated the query, A may direct additional queries to other clients within the group that have not yet been queried. If the similarity value exceeds the second threshold, client A evaluates which lists it wants to retrieve from the responding peers. If the relative size of any of the other lists is sufficient, A may request the complete list from the responding peer. For example, A may request a full recording history from one respondent and a complete list of ratings from another. Upon receiving the lists, A further evaluates the lists for correlation, and uses them to generate collaborative suggestions for the user. Appropriate methods for computing correlation and generating collaborative suggestions are described in the co-pending application previously mentioned, K. Ali, et al., supra.

Method 2: Iterative Disclosure.

The previous method assumed that sending a full list of items can be done in small packets that travel easily over the connecting network. When the lists are large, like the recording history, or the ratings list, this method is inefficient. An alternate approach is the sharing of the lists in successive blocks, in iterative fashion. In the following description, as above, Client A is the originator and Client B is the target:

-   -   Client A takes a block that includes the first n consecutive         items in it's list and transmits it to B.     -   B receives the list and determines matching items; and transmits         a list of matching items to A.     -   A creates a temporary matching items list, where it saves the         list received from B, and transmits another block of n items         to B. B responds with another list of matching items, which A         adds to its temporary list. With each succeeding response from         B, A evaluates what portion of the total number of items shared         with B the two peers have in common. When enough items have been         tested by repeating the above steps, the ratio remains         relatively constant from one iteration to the next. At that         point, the similarity value for the partial data is         representative of the similarity value for the entire list. The         query then proceeds as described above, in which A requests from         the target the lists it wishes to receive.

Method 3: Iterative Disclosure of Ratings

Similar to the previous method:

-   -   Again, A Sends partial lists to B, and B echoes back what it         has. Meanwhile A and B keep track of what they share. In         addition, the lists that A sends to B contain A's ratings of the         items, and B's answers contain B's ratings of the items matching         items. Thus, both A and B maintain a list of items, with both         A's and B's ratings. This allows A and B to use standard         correlation math to determine how well A and B. As the size of         the list of items they have in common grows, the correlation         factors will tend to mirror the real correlation factor that         would be obtained if all available data was known to both A and         B.     -   According to a minimum confidence requirement standard (based on         the number of items shared from A, and number of items that are         shared) the process is repeated until the standard is satisfied.         After that, A and B can determine if the correlation is high         enough to proceed with sharing full lists or to terminate the         connection, in the event of an insufficient correlation.

Those skilled in the art will recognize that the roles of originator and target have been employed for purposes of description. In actual fact, each client within a group is both an originator and a target, wherein each client directs queries to other clients and receives queries from other clients. Furthermore, while the client-server system of the copending application and the present peer-to-peer system have been treated as parallel systems for the sake of description, the skilled practitioner will appreciate that they are, in fact, one system having parallel functionalities. Thus, the client units interact with the server in the usual client-server fashion, and simultaneously also have the peer-to-peer functionality herein described. The invention is implemented using conventional techniques well known to those skilled in the art of software engineering and computer programming. The network implementation will be apparent to those skilled in the design and administration of data networks.

While a narrow band dial up connection renders the transmission between clients of large media files impractical, broadband implementations of the invention, wherein connection is by means of fiber optic or coaxial cable, DSL, T1 or T3, or the like, enable the peer-to-peer sharing of the underlying content, as well as the user preference files.

Although the invention has been described herein with reference to certain preferred embodiments, one skilled in the art will readily appreciate that other applications may be substituted without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Accordingly, the invention should only be limited by the Claims included below. 

1. A method comprising: sharing, between clients in a group of clients, preference data of users associated with the group of clients; based upon the shared preference data, a first client in the group of clients identifying one or more suggested items for a second client in the group of clients; wherein the method is performed by one or more computing devices.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the first client and the second client are different media devices.
 3. The method of claim 1, further comprising: receiving, at the first client, second preference data of a second user of the second client; comparing, at the first client, the second preference data of the second user to first preference data of a first user of the first client; based on the comparing, determining, at the first client, whether the second client is similar to the first client; based on determining that the second client is similar to the first client, providing the one or more suggested items to the second client.
 4. The method of claim 3, further comprising the second client transmitting the second preference data to the first client based on grouping data specifying that the first client belongs to the group of clients.
 5. The method of claim 3, further comprising: receiving, at a third client, second preference data of a second user of the second client; comparing, at the third client, the second preference data of the second user to third preference data of a third user of the third client; based on the comparing, determining, at the third client, whether the third client is not similar to the second client; based on determining that the third client is not similar to the second client, the third client sending the second preference data to the first client based on grouping data specifying that the first client belongs to the group of clients.
 6. The method of claim 3, wherein the receiving, comparing, and determining are repeated iteratively until the a minimum confidence standard is satisfied.
 7. The method of claim 1, further comprising the first client and the second client receiving grouping data from a central server identifying the clients in the group of clients.
 8. The method of claim 1, wherein the preference data for a given client of the first client and the second client, and the one or more suggested items comprise one or more of: a list of media items stored on the given client; a list of media items desired by a given user of the given client; or a list of media items rated by the given user of the given client.
 9. The method of claim 1, further comprising: receiving, at the second client, a similarity score measuring similarity between first preference data of a first user of the first client and second preference data of a second user of the second client; based on the similarity score, the second client requesting that the first client identify the one or more suggested items.
 10. The method of claim 1, further comprising: prior to the first client identifying the one or more suggested items, the first client receiving first grouping data indicating that the first client and the second client are in a first group of clients, the first group of clients being the group of clients; the first client sharing first preference data with the clients in the first group of clients based on the first grouping data; after the first client identifies the one or more suggested items, the first client receiving second grouping data indicating that the first client is in a second group of clients that does not include the second client; based on the second grouping data, sharing, between clients in the second group of clients, second preference data of users associated with the second group of clients; based upon the second preference data shared between the clients in the second group of clients, the first client identifying one or more suggested items for a third client in the second group of clients.
 11. A method comprising: comparing first preference data of a first user of a first client with second preference data of a second user of a second client; identifying one or more suggested media items for the second client based on the comparison; causing the first client to send to the second client the one or more suggested media items; wherein the method is performed by one or more computing devices.
 12. The method of claim 11, wherein the first client and the second client are different media devices.
 13. The method of claim 11, further comprising the second client requesting to download the one or more suggested media items from the first client.
 14. The method of claim 11, further comprising: determining whether the first client is similar to the second client; upon determining that the first client is similar to the second client, identifying the one or more suggested media items.
 15. The method of claim 11, wherein the comparing, identifying, and causing are performed by one or both of the first client and the second client.
 16. The method of claim 11, further comprising: the first client and the second client receiving grouping data from a central server identifying clients in a group of clients; wherein the comparing, identifying, and causing are performed in response to determining, based on the grouping data, that the first client and the second client are in the group of clients.
 17. A system comprising one or more computing devices configured to cause performance of: sharing, between clients in a group of clients, preference data of users associated with the group of clients; based upon the shared preference data, a first client in the group of clients identifying one or more suggested items for a second client in the group of clients.
 18. The system of claim 17, wherein the first client and the second client are different media devices.
 19. The system of claim 17, wherein the one or more computing devices are further configured to cause performance of: receiving, at the first client, second preference data of a second user of the second client; comparing, at the first client, the second preference data of the second user to first preference data of a first user of the first client; based on the comparing, determining, at the first client, whether the second client is similar to the first client; based on determining that the second client is similar to the first client, providing the one or more suggested items to the second client.
 20. The system of claim 19, wherein the one or more computing devices are further configured to cause performance of the second client transmitting the second preference data to the first client based on grouping data specifying that the first client belongs to the group of clients.
 21. The system of claim 19, wherein the one or more computing devices are further configured to cause performance of: receiving, at a third client, second preference data of a second user of the second client; comparing, at the third client, the second preference data of the second user to third preference data of a third user of the third client; based on the comparing, determining, at the third client, whether the third client is not similar to the second client; based on determining that the third client is not similar to the second client, the third client sending the second preference data to the first client based on grouping data specifying that the first client belongs to the group of clients.
 22. The system of claim 19, wherein the receiving, comparing, and determining are repeated iteratively until the a minimum confidence standard is satisfied.
 23. The system of claim 17, wherein the one or more computing devices are further configured to cause performance of the first client and the second client receiving grouping data from a central server identifying the clients in the group of clients.
 24. The system of claim 17, wherein the preference data for a given client of the first client and the second client, and the one or more suggested items comprise one or more of: a list of media items stored on the given client; a list of media items desired by a given user of the given client; or a list of media items rated by the given user of the given client.
 25. The system of claim 17, wherein the one or more computing devices are further configured to cause performance of: receiving, at the second client, a similarity score measuring similarity between first preference data of a first user of the first client and second preference data of a second user of the second client; based on the similarity score, the second client requesting that the first client identify the one or more suggested items.
 26. The system of claim 17, wherein the one or more computing devices are further configured to cause performance of: prior to the first client identifying the one or more suggested items, the first client receiving first grouping data indicating that the first client and the second client are in a first group of clients, the first group of clients being the group of clients; the first client sharing first preference data with the clients in the first group of clients based on the first grouping data; after the first client identifies the one or more suggested items, the first client receiving second grouping data indicating that the first client is in a second group of clients that does not include the second client; based on the second grouping data, sharing, between clients in the second group of clients, second preference data of users associated with the second group of clients; based upon the second preference data shared between the clients in the second group of clients, the first client identifying one or more suggested items for a third client in the second group of clients.
 27. An apparatus configured to cause performance of: comparing first preference data of a first user of a first client with second preference data of a second user of a second client; identifying one or more suggested media items for the second client based on the comparison; causing the first client to send to the second client the one or more suggested media items.
 28. The apparatus of claim 27, wherein the first client and the second client are different media devices.
 29. The apparatus of claim 27, wherein the apparatus is further configured to cause performance of the second client requesting to download the one or more suggested media items from the first client.
 30. The apparatus of claim 27, wherein the apparatus is further configured to cause performance of: determining whether the first client is similar to the second client; upon determining that the first client is similar to the second client, identifying the one or more suggested media items.
 31. The apparatus of claim 27, wherein the comparing, identifying, and causing are performed by one or both of the first client and the second client.
 32. The apparatus of claim 27, wherein the apparatus is further configured to cause performance of: the first client and the second client receiving grouping data from a central server identifying clients in a group of clients; wherein the comparing, identifying, and causing are performed in response to determining, based on the grouping data, that the first client and the second client are in the group of clients.
 33. One or more non-transitory computer-readable media storing instructions that, when executed by one or more computing devices, cause performance of: sharing, between clients in a group of clients, preference data of users associated with the group of clients; based upon the shared preference data, a first client in the group of clients identifying one or more suggested items for a second client in the group of clients.
 34. One or more non-transitory computer-readable media storing instructions that, when executed by one or more computing devices, cause performance of: comparing first preference data of a first user of a first client with second preference data of a second user of a second client; identifying one or more suggested media items for the second client based on the comparison; causing the first client to send to the second client the one or more suggested media items. 